Publication | Closed Access
Implicit attitudes toward smoking: How the smell of cigarettes influences responses of college-age smokers and nonsmokers
12
Citations
55
References
2013
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingSocial PsychologyConsumer ResearchCognitionPerceptionSocial Determinants Of HealthAttentionPsychologySocial SciencesAttitude TheoryTobacco ControlHealth CommunicationBiasPublic HealthUnconscious BiasImplicit AttitudesCollege-age SmokersBehavioral SciencesTobacco UseSocial CognitionAutomatic Behavioral ComponentsNegative Implicit AttitudesHealth BehaviorBehavioral InsightTobacco PolicyCigarettes Influences ResponsesConsumer Attitude
The habit of smoking may have automatic behavioral components guided by implicit attitudes. Smokers' attitudes toward smoking should thus be less negative than nonsmokers', so that a salient smoking cue (smell) is able to activate positive aspects of these attitudes. An affective priming task was used to explore this hypothesis. Unexpectedly, smokers and nonsmokers showed equally negative implicit attitudes, irrespective of smell. Smokers exposed to the cigarette smell did, however, display generally slower responses than nonsmokers, suggesting attentional bias. This could have implications for smoking policies in contexts where attentional factors affect performance.
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